576 results
Looking for Eric [15] review
For my undergraduate dissertation, I wrote 20,000 average yet quite pretentious words on Ken ...
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Review | cinema
Twelfth Night review
The thing about Shakespeare, I think, is that no matter how many times you read it, whether by ...
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Review | theatre
Jack Gibbons review - Jack Gibbons plays Gershwin
If you haven't heard Jack Gibbons play Gershwin, you really should*. He's amazing. Three reasons: ...
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Review | concerts
Jericho Comedy Club review -
On a dreary Bonfire night when rain dampened the fireworks, another excellent evening was had by ...
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Review | gigs
The Scholars + Fixers + Huck & the Handsome Fee + Inventions of Jerry Darge review - The Cellar, 20th August 2009
Inventions Of Jerry Darge are a peculiar band. Kind of like Mogwai if they'd been commissioned to ...
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Review | gigs
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull [12A] review
Pamplemousse is perhaps a bit harsh about this movie, but doesn’t mention the thing I found ...
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Review | cinema
The Tempest review
It was the drool on Sam Kennedy’s chin that summed it all up. It takes real physical and dramatic ...
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Review | theatre
Oxon Ideal Green Home Show review
This Thursday, 17 April 2008, Oxford Town Hall hosts Oxfordshire’s first ever Ideal Green Homes ...
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Review | uncategorised
Happy-Go-Lucky review - Eddie Marsan – Happy-Go-Lucky’s not so happy driving instructor – is perhaps Britain’s most consistently impressive character actor. Hardly a household name, he’s popped up in blockbusters (like Miami Vice, Mission Impossible 3 and Gangs of New York) and indies too (21 Grams, Pierrepoint, Sixty Six). He even started out in Oxford, doing garden-play Shakespeare. Glenn Watson chats to Britain’s best kept secret…
You’re not a celebrity but you get pretty much rave reviews for your performances. How do you ...
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Review | cinema
Interviews with the stars! review - Eddie Marsan – Happy-Go-Lucky’s not so happy driving instructor – is perhaps Britain’s most consistently impressive character actor. Hardly a household name, he’s popped up in blockbusters (like Miami Vice, Mission Impossible 3 and Gangs of New York) and indies too (21 Grams, Pierrepoint, Sixty Six). He even started out in Oxford, doing garden-play Shakespeare. Glenn Watson chats to Britain’s best kept secret…
You’re not a celebrity but you get pretty much rave reviews for your performances. How do you ...
More info
Review | cinema
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